What does it mean to understand each of these? What do we expect if something is to be called "understanding"? — Srap Tasmaner
hat is it about (1) meaning-as-use on the one hand, and (2) abstract language features on the other, that makes the two incompatible? This is what I'm trying to get you to articulate. — StreetlightX
OK, and what does that have to do with meaning-as-use? — StreetlightX
Meaning as use has it's root in behavior, not cognitive science. — Marchesk
Not once in our exchange have you even used the word behaviour, — StreetlightX
If language is use, how do we distinguish between the kind of communication that animals utilize, and what humans do with words?
The conveyance of thought is its primary use and its communicative use is secondary — Cavacava
Great. So then all animals that make sounds in social situations are also using a language.And other words are just sounds we make in particular social situations, mostly to elicit certain responses from others. — Michael
The word 'chair' is used to refer to some particular chair or chairs or to a generalized imagined instance. So, it would seem that its meaning does depend on its use. But then, its use also depends on its meaning, which shows that although they are codependent they are not one and the same. — John
'Chair' can be used in a sentence where it doesn't "point at anything", for example: "What makes a chair a chair?". — John
The use here is very different than "Will you hand me that chair". Are the meanings of 'chair' the same in both examples despite the obviously different uses?
We can do that with pointing, too. Let's say that if we use this particular way of pointing with one hand and then shake our other hand we are acknowledging that there isn't an actual chair lined up with our pointing finger, and so we are pointing to a hypothetical chair, or chairs in general. — Michael
This is a misleading question. The sentence "Will you hand me that chair" and the sentence "What makes a chair a chair?" are used differently and so mean different things. — Michael
Now if all Witty was arguing is that we assign meaning by how we use words in certain contexts, then no problem. But if he's saying that meaning IS behavior, then that's a problem. — Marchesk
Now if all Witty was arguing is that we assign meaning by how we use words in certain contexts, then no problem. But if he's saying that meaning IS behavior, then that's a problem. — Marchesk
And by referring to something with your words, that is what you mean. Just pointing a finger means one thing - referring. Pointing to a chair means referring to a chair.Meaning-as-use doesn't entail that words don't refer to things. If I point to a chair then I am referring to a chair, but we don't explain the meaning of a pointing finger by deferring to the chair; we explain the meaning of a pointing finger by deferring to its use. — Michael
What about the things we experience that aren't words? What does the yellowness of a banana mean, or it's blackness? What does a grey cloud mean? It seems that things other than words and how they are used are imbued with meaning. — Harry Hindu
Wittgenstein would not disagree. See sections 73-74 from the Investigations that I quoted on p.3, which talk about samples: W' repeatedly makes the point that many different things other than words (such as color samples) can belong to language and be part of the symbolism (see also section 50 about the standard meter in Paris).It seems that things other than words and how they are used are imbued with meaning. — Harry Hindu
This makes no sense. The meaning of a yellow banana is that is it ripe. It's blackness means it is rotten. We don't need language to know this. We simply need experience with yellow and black bananas.What is true though is that for Wittgenstein 'meaning' is not an external relation (e.g. causal) between words and things: if word 'refers' to something then that something belongs to language, or has a symbolic function as much as the word which stands for that thing. — Fafner
how is it that your mother pops into your head — Harry Hindu
If you are using a color of something to represent something else, then the color itself becomes a symbol, you don't even need words for that. I don't see how your example contradicts anything that I said.This makes no sense. The meaning of a yellow banana is that is it ripe. It's blackness means it is rotten. We don't need language to know this. — Harry Hindu
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